Abstract

The Pirashkaft karst type bauxite is located in north of the Paskuhak anticline, Pirashkaft region, in the Fars province (Iran). The deposit is composed of six bauxite horizons, occurring between upper Cretaceous Sarvak and Gurpy Formations, and formed in the late Turonian. Mineralogical composition includes boehmite, hematite, diaspore, kaolinite, goethite, anatase and minor minerals like, gibbsite, spinel, rutile, and kaolinite. The major oxides in the bauxite horizons mainly comprise Al2O3 (46.93–61.34 wt%), SiO2 (5.78–14.60 wt%), Fe2O3 (11.22–28.00 wt%), and TiO2 (1.66–3.03 wt%). The bauxite has a pisolitic–oolitic texture. Pisoids are mainly composed of large Al-bearing hematite cores, surrounded by layers of gibbsite or boehmite. This structure suggests that bauxite formed under a humid climatic regime, punctuated by periodic arid periods. In the Pirashkaft deposit, LREEs vary between 136.49 ppm and 928.56 ppm, whilst HREEs range from 16.48 ppm to 59.5 ppm. Positive anomalies of Ce (Ce/Ce* between 1.08 and 2.36) indicate dominant oxidizing conditions during the bauxitization process. The Eu/Eu* anomalies of the bauxite samples vary between 0.44 and 0.92, this suggesting that parent material likely derived from two geochemically distinct source rocks. Stratigraphical, mineralogical, and geochemical evidences, such as the REE distribution between the bauxitic horizons and the Sarvak marly limestone, suggest that the underlying marly carbonates were one of the sources of the Pirashkaft bauxite.

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